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1.
Appetite ; 91: 173-8, 2015 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25865662

ABSTRACT

This study investigated Brazilian university students' perceptions of the concept of calories, how it relates to food healthiness, and the role of calorie information on menus in influencing food choices in different restaurant settings. Focus groups were conducted with 21 undergraduate students from various universities. Transcriptions were analysed for qualitative content, by coding and grouping words and phrases into similar themes. Two categories were obtained: Calorie concept and connection to healthiness; and Calorie information and food choices in restaurants. Calories were understood as energy units, and their excessive intake was associated with weight gain or fat gain. However, food healthiness was not associated to calorie content, but rather to food composition as a whole. Calorie information on restaurant menus was not considered enough to influence food choices, with preferences, dietary restrictions, food composition, and even restaurant type mentioned as equally or more important. Only a few participants mentioned using calorie information on menus to control food intake or body weight. Students' discussions were suggestive of an understanding of healthy eating as a more complex issue than calorie-counting. Discussions also suggested the need for more nutrition information, besides calorie content, to influence food choices in restaurants.


Subject(s)
Choice Behavior , Energy Intake , Food Labeling , Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice , Nutritive Value , Restaurants , Universities , Adult , Brazil , Diet/standards , Eating , Feeding Behavior , Female , Focus Groups , Food Preferences , Health , Humans , Male , Obesity/prevention & control , Perception , Students , Young Adult
2.
Work ; 49(4): 619-26, 2014.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24004763

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Nutritional aspects are important for the prevention of diseases and disorders, and few studies have focused on the relationship between risk of work injury and nutritional variables. OBJECTIVE: This study aimed to verify whether nutritional variables constitute risk factors for work-related accidents. PARTICIPANTS: 1,422 industrial workers (600 cases plus 822 controls). METHODS: A case-control study was carried out in an industrial city in south-east Brazil. A multiple logistic regression model was adjusted using work-related accidents as the response variable and nutritional variables as predictors. The associations were assessed by Odds Ratio (OR), with a p-value < 0.05. RESULTS: 47.29% of the workers were overweight or obese. Protective factors for work-related accidents were (a) attending formal education for an above average number of years (OR=0.91, p< 0.0001) and (b) eating a traditional dinner (OR=0.67, p=0.0087). Risks factors were (a) hard physical effort in the workplace (OR=1.37, p< 0.0001), (b) having lunch in the workplace (OR=1.57, p<0.0001) and (c) receiving government benefits in the form of food stamps (OR=1.39, p=0.0350) or food baskets (OR=1.30, p=0.0414). CONCLUSION: Our findings suggest an association between nutritional variables and work-related accidents. This indicates the need, during the formulation of policies for these kinds of government benefits, to include nutrition aspects in order to minimize work-related accidents risks.


Subject(s)
Feeding Behavior , Nutritive Value , Occupational Injuries/prevention & control , Adult , Brazil , Case-Control Studies , Female , Humans , Logistic Models , Male , Middle Aged , Obesity/complications , Obesity/mortality , Organizational Policy , Risk Factors
3.
Public Health Nutr ; 16(12): 2146-53, 2013 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23388131

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: The present study investigated how trans-fat is reported on the packaging of foods sold in a Brazilian supermarket. DESIGN: The present descriptive, cross-sectional study analysed the ingredient list, nutrition facts label and claims of no trans-fat on the packaging. SETTING: A large supermarket in Florianópolis, Brazil. SUBJECTS: All food products available at the supermarket. RESULTS: Of the 2327 study products, more than half had components containing trans-fat in the ingredient list, especially hydrogenated vegetable fat and its alternative names. A small percentage of food products reported some trans-fat content on the nutrition facts label and roughly a quarter of the food products claimed to contain no trans-fat on the front of the packaging. There was very low agreement among the trans-fat content reported in the nutrition facts label, claims of no trans-fat made on the packaging and the ingredient list. CONCLUSIONS: There was low agreement among the different ways of reporting trans-fat, suggesting that it is not possible to rely on the nutrition facts label or no trans-fat claims printed on the packaging of Brazilian food products. Hence, the Brazilian legislation on food labels needs to change to improve the reliability of food labels and to help control the trans-fat intake of the population.


Subject(s)
Diet , Dietary Fats , Food Labeling , Trans Fatty Acids , Brazil , Cross-Sectional Studies , Deception , Dietary Fats/analysis , Humans , Marketing , Nutritive Value , Trans Fatty Acids/analysis
4.
Int J Environ Health Res ; 23(6): 520-30, 2013 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23438290

ABSTRACT

The present study assesses some factors that may influence the development of lower limb venous disease in workers of a hospital food service unit. An Ergonomic analysis of work was carried out at a hospital located in the south of Brazil. As for data collection, the following were used: interviews and body mass index assessment; specific clinical examination to diagnose venous disease, water displacement volumetry of the lower limbs. The activities performed at the workplace were followed by direct observation with image registration, use of pedometers, stopwatches, decibel meter, and digital thermo-hygrometer. It was observed different degrees of venous disease in 78% of the cases investigated. The volumetric variation of the lower limbs was 5.13%, showing the presence of edema. Working in hospital food service is associated with circulatory disorders of lower limbs, such as edema and venous disease. The following risk factors were identified: standing activities at work during a long period of time, high temperature, and humidity and carrying heavy weights.


Subject(s)
Food Service, Hospital , Occupational Diseases/epidemiology , Peripheral Vascular Diseases/epidemiology , Adult , Brazil , Female , Humans , Lower Extremity/blood supply , Lower Extremity/physiopathology , Middle Aged , Occupational Diseases/etiology , Peripheral Vascular Diseases/etiology , Risk Factors , Surveys and Questionnaires
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